Iomega eGo Mac Edition 500GB

At a Glance

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Well-detailed, shiny, and compact, Iomega’s eGo line of portable hard drives injects some style into a sea of grey brick-shaped external drives. Known for its iconic sleek designs, Iomega updated the eGo hard-drive line with improved speeds and more versatile connectivity (we tested the new 500GB eGo).

The eGo is light, portable, and only slightly larger than an iPhone. The drive weighs less than 7 ounces and easily can fit into your pants pocket. While the unit is sleek, it still has its design quirks. The activity light is at the rear of the drive next to the ports; it’s plenty bright so you’ll know it’s on, but it seems odd to not have it on the front.

The drive has USB 2.0, FireWire 400, and FireWire 800 connectivity and is bus powered. Iomega also includes a Y cable that draws power from two USB ports in case you have an older Mac that doesn’t generate enough power through a single USB port. This Y cable makes the eGo more versatile than competing portable drives, many of which don’t include such a cable.

The press materials for the eGo line highlight Iomega’s Drop Guard feature that is designed to protect the drive from drops up to 51 inches. But we here at Macworld are a bit more thorough. I’m almost six feet tall and I dropped the eGo from eye level, and then kicked and tossed it around a few times to simulate accidental drops and angry tirades that my external drives sometimes encounter. The eGo experienced no slow down and my data remained intact. The eGo also comes with a three-year warranty.

The eGo performed admirably but not exceptionally in our speed tests. The eGo finished our copy test slightly behind OWC’s Mercury Pro On-The-Go (), but several seconds ahead of the flask-like 2008 model of Iomega’s eGo (). The latest eGo model finished our copy test in 36 seconds when using its FireWire 800 connection, only a second off the Mercury Pro.

The eGo had more difficulty with our duplication and Photoshop tests, finishing the tests typically 10 seconds behind the Mercury Pro when using its FireWire 800 and USB connections. Still, these test results are significant boosts from the older eGo model and bested another Iomega portable hard drive, the USB-only eGo Helium () by at least 20 percent on several tests.

The comparatively slower times can in part be contributed to the eGo’s 5,400-RPM mechanism with 8MB of cache. Though it runs quietly, the eGo isn’t as zippy as faster portable units that use 7,200-RPM mechanisms (like the Mercury Pro, for example).

In addition to a new look and a speed upgrade, the eGo line gets an improved bundled of backup software, which starts with Iomega QuikProtect for Mac, a backup program for simple scheduled file-level backup.

You also get EMC Retrospect, a backup program for data, applications, and settings; and MozyHome, an online backup service with 2GB of online capacity available to the user for free (while unlimited storage space will set you back $5 a month). The Iomega is Time Machine compatible.

Timed trials

Copy 1GB file to USB 2.0

0:53

Copy 1GB file to FireWire 400

0:48

Copy 1GB file to FireWire 800

0:36

Duplicate 1GB file via USB 2.0

1:25

Duplicate 1GB file via FireWire 400

1:15

Duplicate 1GB file via FireWire 800

0:53

Low-memory Photoshop: USB 2.0

1:39

Low-memory Photoshop: FireWire 400

1:35

Low-memory Photoshop: FireWire 800

1:29

Scale = Minutes: Seconds

How we tested: We ran all tests with the drive connected to a Mac Pro Quad 2.66GHz Xeon with Mac OS X 10.5 installed and 1GB of RAM. We tested the drive with each available port. We copied a folder containing 1GB of data from our Mac's hard drive to the external hard drive to test the drive's write speed. We then duplicated that file on the external drive to test both read and write speeds. We also used the drive as a scratch disk when running our low-memory Adobe Photoshop CS3 Suite test. This test is a set of four tasks performed on a 150MB file, with Photoshop's memory set to 25 percent.—Macworld Lab Testing by Chris Holt

The 500GB capacity is common for portable drives, but portable drives can’t compete with the speed of desktop drives. At $150, the Iomega eGo has a price per gigabyte of 30 cents—fairly standard for a new portable drive. The 500GB eGo is available only in Ruby Red; a 320GB Midnight Blue ($110) model and a 250GB Alpine White ($100) model are also available.

Specifications

Price per gigabyte

$.30

Connectors

USB 2.0 (1), FireWire 400 (1), FireWire 800 (1)

Rotational speed

5,400 rpm

Other capacities

250GB, 320GB

Macworld’s buying advice

The eGo has improved significantly over the older version of the eGo, offering faster speed and a better software bundle. While not the fastest portable drive on today’s market, fans of Iomega will appreciate the rock-solid warranty and versatile backup options.

Amazon Shop buttons are programmatically attached to all reviews, regardless of products' final review scores. Our parent company, IDG, receives advertisement revenue for shopping activity generated by the links. Because the buttons are attached programmatically, they should not be interpreted as editorial endorsements.